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Tomorrow's Their Day
ORTHERN ARIZONA UNIVERSITY UBRARY
2,000 Moms, D(lds 1• n Spotlight
Ever get the feeling there's some kind of mass
take-over going on around you?
roaming around to answer questions or discuss their
area with the parents.
start of the game. Cheerleaders will also be hoJa­ing
a crash poster, made by Kayettes, for the team
to break through. The players will then be "led"
down the field by the cheerleaders.
There is-over 2,000 parents will take over the
NAU campus tomorrow as NAU bridges the gener­ation
gap with its fourteenth annual Mom and Dad's
Day celebratlon.
Activities from 8 in the morning till 8 at night
wui be served up to visiting parents on a silver
platter by individual students and many participating
organizations.
A gourmet delight will be the Honors Convoca ­tion
at 9:30 a.m. for recognition of outstanding
scholars. Dr. Charles o. Minor, Dean of the For­estry
Department, has been chosen as featured
speaker at the assembly of top students and proud
parents.
Entertainment during the main course of the ban­quet
served up for moms and dads includes the
halftime awards to be given out at the game. Four
"A" blankets will be presented by co-chairmen
Chambers and Miss Cooksey to visiting parents.
The many-course meal of events begins Satur­day
morning with the appetizer of registration con­ducted
in the Activity Center by Sopbos and Spurs.
Pointing the way to the registration booth will be
Circle K and Kayettes, and if the adults still feel
confused when they get to the AC, an information
booth will also be manned there by Cardinal Key
and Blue Key to help out.
On the menu of events also is dorm visitation
from 10 a.m. till 2 p.m. Moms and Dads are in­vited
up to the sacred inner sanctums, students'
dorm rooms, to view the startling once-a-year hap.
pening-clean dwellings en masse, in every halL
A special treat for the youngsters who may grow
bored watching the football game will be two Walt
Disney films. The movies, free and supervised,
will begin at 1:30 p.m. in the University Auditor­Tile
entree of the baiW:Iuet will be, of course, tne ium (CU).
football game between NAU and Eastern New Mex­ico
University. The game begins at 1:30 p.m. and
will feature the first year of what Dan Chambers,
co chairman, hopes will become a tradition •
After the game, parents are invited to get a
"taste" of what their college-offspring do-Saga
Food. The three dining halls will be the site for a
special dinner of roast beef, steak or shrimp for
hungry mothers and fathers.
First course in the baiX~.uet ls college visitation
from 9-12 a.m. The various departments will be
open and department beads and professors will be
He said that members of four honoraries-Blue
Key, Cardinal Key, Chain Gang and Honor Board­will
form a "funnel" at the north goal posts for
the NAU football players to run through at the
Arter the full round of activities on the baiX~.uet
table, dessert will be a must, as NAU's theatre de­partment
presents "Most Happy Fella.''
ocr 4 1911
The L mberjack
Friday, November 7, 1969 VOL 58, NO. 14
Expert on Draft
To Express Views
William Smith, noted Los
Angeles attorney and expert
on the draft, young men and
the law has been scheduled
to speak to NAU students Fri­day,
Nov. 14, Brent Adams,
ASNAU president announced
recently.
law schools in Arizona and
California as a supplementary
lecturer to college of law stud­ents
on the subject of the
draft and how the law can be
applied to it. Smith has been
the featured speaker on many
campuses and has been written
about in several nationally­known
newspapers and maga­zines,
such as the Los Angeles
Times and Time magazine.
rights concerning the law.
His approach has been en­dorsed
by the California Bar
Association. Walter Dem­yanek,
Artesia, Calif., attor­ney
and NAU alumnus and pre­sident
of the Southern Califor­nia
Alumni Association, who
has been attending an advanced
seminar with Smith, endorses
Smith's approach to the sub­ject
of the draft and believes
that he has something of im­portance
to say to all young
men.
INSPECTING THE RUINS, rhu unidentified coed wonders now
where •he will rai1e IM money to pay for rlae damage done to her
room in a fire W edne•day. The fire was cauaed by a popcorn pop­per
(See 11ory on p<Jge 2). Photo by Doug Huller
A 36-year old ex-Air Force
captain, Smith will speak on
the draft and the rights andre­sponsibilities
of the young men
subject to it. His insight
into the problems which the
young American male encount­ers
with the draft has develop­ed
his reputation as a speaker
on the subject.
He was quoted in the maga­zine
as s;1ying that there are
tremendous inequities in the
draft law which should be
brought to the attention of the
public. It was clearly stated
in the magazine article that
be does not advocate evading
the draft, but believes that
everyone should know his
Anti- Search Resolution
He bas helped to develop
the new field of the draft and
the law and has been used by
Go to Blazes, All­Attend
Bonfire Rally
With a football team that has a 6·2 record and is ranked
17th in the nation, spirit should be as high as the flames at
tonight's bonfire rally. At least that is the hope of Dan Cham­bers,
Mom and Dad's Day co-chairman.
The rally will be at 8 p.m. on the west side of Tinsley, ac­cording
to Chambers. A barn has been torn down to supply
wood for the balze, and Coach John Symank or one of his repre­sentatives
will be there to introduce the football players.
Sponsored by Chain Gang, the rally will have representation from
all fraternities and sororities and service clubs. "The group
that's best represented in spirit and number will be awarded a
trophy for participation," Chambers added.
The band will supply the music, Sigma Tau Gamma will bring
the wood, and students must supply the enthusiasm, Chambers
concluded. And for anyone who mlgbt forget about it, the rally
wagon will be tearing around the campus during the day to re­mind
students about the fiery event.
To Go
Respondink to what he felt
was unwarranted invasion of ·
privacy on the NAU campus,
ASNAU president Brent Adams
submitted a resolution to his
executive cabinet for their ap­proval
Wednesday. The re­solution
dealt with illegal entry
and search of NAU resident
halls.
Action from Student Senate
is expected next Tuesday on
the president's request for al­teration
of policies concern­ing
the search and entry pro­cedures.
The resolution reads: To
the President of Northern Ari­zona
University and sub­ordinate
administrators re­sponsible
for search and con­tlscatioo
olltams in residence
ball rooms and to tbe Student
Before Senate
Senate and Executive Cabinet
of ASNAU.
Whereas, in "General Hous­ing
lnformati~n" of the NAU
Bulktin, "The University re­serves
the right to search the
room of any student if it has
-reasonable cause to believe
that an infraction of school
rules or laws would be un­covered
in the search of the
room," and
Whereas, there is evidence
that indicates that both men's
and women's residence hall
rooms are entered and inspect­ed
and items are confiscated In
the absence of the resident
and without appropriate search
warrant, and
Whereas, such policies are
an invasion of privacy and are
of questionable legality,
Therefore, as President,
I respectfully request (1) the
President of the University and
subordinate administrators re­sponsible
for entrance, search
and confiscation of items In
residence hall rooms to alter
such written and unwritten pol­icies
and inform the Student
Senate of ASNAU on or before
January 1, 1970, (2) respect­fully
request that students be
an Integral part of the decisions
to alter such policies, and (3)
in the event that no reply or
an indication that sucb policies
have not been altered is re­ceived
on or before Jan. 1,
1970, respecttully request the
Student Senate and Executive
Cabinet of ASNAU to seet an
lnjuoctlon to preventNAUtrom
committing illegal search and
seizure of and In dormitory
rooms.

Tomorrow's Their Day
ORTHERN ARIZONA UNIVERSITY UBRARY
2,000 Moms, D(lds 1• n Spotlight
Ever get the feeling there's some kind of mass
take-over going on around you?
roaming around to answer questions or discuss their
area with the parents.
start of the game. Cheerleaders will also be hoJa­ing
a crash poster, made by Kayettes, for the team
to break through. The players will then be "led"
down the field by the cheerleaders.
There is-over 2,000 parents will take over the
NAU campus tomorrow as NAU bridges the gener­ation
gap with its fourteenth annual Mom and Dad's
Day celebratlon.
Activities from 8 in the morning till 8 at night
wui be served up to visiting parents on a silver
platter by individual students and many participating
organizations.
A gourmet delight will be the Honors Convoca ­tion
at 9:30 a.m. for recognition of outstanding
scholars. Dr. Charles o. Minor, Dean of the For­estry
Department, has been chosen as featured
speaker at the assembly of top students and proud
parents.
Entertainment during the main course of the ban­quet
served up for moms and dads includes the
halftime awards to be given out at the game. Four
"A" blankets will be presented by co-chairmen
Chambers and Miss Cooksey to visiting parents.
The many-course meal of events begins Satur­day
morning with the appetizer of registration con­ducted
in the Activity Center by Sopbos and Spurs.
Pointing the way to the registration booth will be
Circle K and Kayettes, and if the adults still feel
confused when they get to the AC, an information
booth will also be manned there by Cardinal Key
and Blue Key to help out.
On the menu of events also is dorm visitation
from 10 a.m. till 2 p.m. Moms and Dads are in­vited
up to the sacred inner sanctums, students'
dorm rooms, to view the startling once-a-year hap.
pening-clean dwellings en masse, in every halL
A special treat for the youngsters who may grow
bored watching the football game will be two Walt
Disney films. The movies, free and supervised,
will begin at 1:30 p.m. in the University Auditor­Tile
entree of the baiW:Iuet will be, of course, tne ium (CU).
football game between NAU and Eastern New Mex­ico
University. The game begins at 1:30 p.m. and
will feature the first year of what Dan Chambers,
co chairman, hopes will become a tradition •
After the game, parents are invited to get a
"taste" of what their college-offspring do-Saga
Food. The three dining halls will be the site for a
special dinner of roast beef, steak or shrimp for
hungry mothers and fathers.
First course in the baiX~.uet ls college visitation
from 9-12 a.m. The various departments will be
open and department beads and professors will be
He said that members of four honoraries-Blue
Key, Cardinal Key, Chain Gang and Honor Board­will
form a "funnel" at the north goal posts for
the NAU football players to run through at the
Arter the full round of activities on the baiX~.uet
table, dessert will be a must, as NAU's theatre de­partment
presents "Most Happy Fella.''
ocr 4 1911
The L mberjack
Friday, November 7, 1969 VOL 58, NO. 14
Expert on Draft
To Express Views
William Smith, noted Los
Angeles attorney and expert
on the draft, young men and
the law has been scheduled
to speak to NAU students Fri­day,
Nov. 14, Brent Adams,
ASNAU president announced
recently.
law schools in Arizona and
California as a supplementary
lecturer to college of law stud­ents
on the subject of the
draft and how the law can be
applied to it. Smith has been
the featured speaker on many
campuses and has been written
about in several nationally­known
newspapers and maga­zines,
such as the Los Angeles
Times and Time magazine.
rights concerning the law.
His approach has been en­dorsed
by the California Bar
Association. Walter Dem­yanek,
Artesia, Calif., attor­ney
and NAU alumnus and pre­sident
of the Southern Califor­nia
Alumni Association, who
has been attending an advanced
seminar with Smith, endorses
Smith's approach to the sub­ject
of the draft and believes
that he has something of im­portance
to say to all young
men.
INSPECTING THE RUINS, rhu unidentified coed wonders now
where •he will rai1e IM money to pay for rlae damage done to her
room in a fire W edne•day. The fire was cauaed by a popcorn pop­per
(See 11ory on p